One of the distinguishing
principles of anarchist practice is that if we are to achieve our aims, they
must already exist in the methods we use to attain them. The most basic aim of
all anarchist revolutionary activity is the destruction of every structure of
authority, every hierarchy, domination in all its
forms. But to understand what this means in the immediate practice of struggle,
it is necessary to have some idea of what this means beyond the negations. I am
not speaking here about utopian blueprints or political (or even
anti-political) programs, but rather about of how we can relate to each other
in a way that is truly free of hierarchy and domination in our projects aimed
at the destruction of this society and the creation of different ways of living
and being together. It is important to keep in mind that the anarchist project
is not to be a political program among political programs, another ideology in
the marketplace of opinion (and thus, the eternal loser it is bound to be in
that arena), but rather to develop a practice of social subversion here and now
that is in perpetual conflict with the social order that surrounds us.

The absence of any
sort of domination, of any sort of hierarchy, of any imposed order would
manifest in practice as the practical capacity for every individual to decide
for herself how she is going to live his life and to freely choose with whom he
is going to share it and how. This is the meaning of self-organization – that
most fundamental of anarchist principles. If instead we were to interpret the
self that is organizing as a collective entity, then we would have to recognize
that every state, every corporation, every institution is technically
“self-organized”. Self-organization in the anarchist sense starts from
individual self-determination and develops itself from there.

The application of
this idea to our practice of revolt has significant implications in terms of
the way we organize our projects and decide how to carry them out. Perhaps the
first principle to be drawn from this is that organization in itself has no
value. The value of organization lies in the use that each of us can make of it
in carrying out the tasks necessary for creating her life and struggles in
solidarity with others. Thus, the point is not to create massive organizations
that seek members and that represent a particular perspective (anarchist, anarcho-communist, revolutionary or whatever label is
chosen for the group), but rather to bring together the time, the space, the
tools and the accomplices for carrying out the projects and activities we
desire, the projects that can combine to form that “collective movement of
individual realization” that is revolution in its fullest sense.

Unfortunately,
many anarchists – even some who may claim to reject formal organization –
organize their projects on a collectivist model. The desire to carry out a
project together and the need to organize that project is transformed into the
creation of a collective entity that represents that project. This collective entity
and the project it represents come to have priority over the individuals who
first had the desire to do the project. The contradiction between this model
and the anarchist principle of self-organization as described above becomes
most evident in the way decisions are made in these collectives. As soon as a
collective entity formalizes, it becomes necessary for decisions to be made as
a collective, and this requires a decision-making process. Thus, in joining the
collective, the individual must sacrifice her capacity to decide for himself to
the need of the collective for a decision-making process that is incumbent on
all. The two processes most commonly used in collectives formed by anarchists
are direct democracy (majority decision) and consensus.

Consensus has been described quite well as a
method for obtaining people’s support without allowing them to express
themselves autonomously. Starting from the idea that the needs of the
collective take priority over the individuals involved, it seeks a decision
that no one in the group will actively oppose, and once such a decision is
reached (usually through hours and hours of tedious discussion that, as likely
as not, merely wears down some of those in the group), everyone is expected to
abide by it. Achieving consensus among any more than a few people is
necessarily a matter of finding the lowest common denominator between all
involved and accepting this lowest common denominator as the highest level of
action. Thus, if we are talking specifically of anarchist revolutionary
projects, the consensus process operates by lowering the level of critique that
can be actively expressed. It is easy to get people to accept and rally around
superficial critiques, but deep, radical critiques – and the kind of activity
they call for – tend to frighten people and cause division. Thus, consensus
best corresponds to a gradualist, piece-meal approach, to a reformist approach
that does not require one to be able to act on one’s own and to make decisions
quickly in the moment of action.

One of the
critiques some anarchists have made of the consensus process – a critique that
is correct as far as it goes – is that if complete consensus were always
required in order to act, nothing would ever get done, because it requires only
one person to block it. But if those who make this critique don’t also reject
the collectivist model, then they have to turn to another decision-making
process, that of direct democracy, i.e., majority rule. From an anarchist
perspective, the problem with this should be obvious. We are opposed to all
rule, that of the majority as well as that of a minority. Even
when it is the desires of the majority that prevail over the rest, even if that
majority comprises 99% of those involved, if this decision is mandatory over
those who do not agree, it is an imposition, a form of rule.

The real problem
with the processes of consensus and direct democracy is that they are based on
the assumption that the collective will, however it is determined, is to
prevail over the will of the individual. But this has always been the basis of
every form of rule, of every institution of authority. It is an act of
self-deception to think that one has eradicated domination and hierarchy simply
because one has eliminated its human face. The most insidious forms of
domination are precisely those invisible concepts that stand above us and
determine our existence – invisible concepts such as the collective will, the
group consensus, the majority. These create the faceless domination, the
disembodied hierarchy, in which the group rules over the individual. The
rejection of all rule in our practice, thus requires the rejection of the
collectivist model and all that it imposes. In other words, it must start from
my choice neither to be ruled nor to rule, and to create my life against every
form of rule to the extent that I am able to do so.

Thus, each of us
decides for ourselves what she will do and does this with those who agree with
him on what to do and how to do it. In this way, those who act together do so
in full unanimity, and the project is not tainted by reservations or
resignation to a decision that was not one’s own. In practice, this inevitably
means that we will come together in small, temporary groups based on affinity.
These groups will be fluid, constantly changing, coming together and breaking
apart. Those who value large-scale unity, a single front to present to the
world, will look upon this as a lack of organization, a weakness preventing
“us” from having a continuous influence over time, from presenting a “real
alternative” to people in struggle. But behind this critique lies the political
program, the preordained schema of how to go about overturning this world, that
can only seek followers, not accomplices.

Acting in small,
temporary groups in which the desires and the will of each individual is fully
realized because the group itself forms out of the coming together of the
individual wills is a completely different way of conceiving revolutionary
transformation. The point is no longer to bring together the masses to storm
the WinterPalace,
but rather to act immediately against the forces of domination we confront in
our daily lives and to organize this activity in a way that expresses our
refusal to be ruled, to submit to any form of higher authority. By not
submitting ourselves to any sort of collective will in the way we carry on our
struggle, we subvert those tendencies toward centralization, representation and
hierarchy that exist even among anarchists, and remain free to act even when
the various so-called revolutionary groups say to wait, to submit to the times.
This is how we express our aim to destroy all domination in the methods by
which we go about our struggle. Each of us starts from himself and finds her
accomplices through the immediate practice of struggle in her life here and
now.